From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by algonkin.
Photographer Kevin Bauman took exquisite photographs of 100 abandoned houses in Detroit, Michigan. He has managed to turn the economic crisis, in form of crumbling houses in various stages of disrepair, into an artwork.
A little slice of heaven!
I'd love to see the insides of some of these.
Just because some guy went into the worst neighborhoods of a city and took photos of abandoned houses doesn't mean it's indicative of everywhere in the city. It's not indicative of MY neighborhood. It's not indicative of my friend's neighborhoods, either.
I love Detroit. It has waaay too many problems to list them right now, but there are a lot of great things happening in this city. Why aren't you finding any of THOSE blog entries, flickr sets or youtube videos?
This sounds like a poser.
I would homestead one of these in a second if i could get a good paying job in the area.
Detroit is still one of the world's most amazing places to learn music or haven't you been listening to motown iggy, mc5 maddona the nuge house music white stripes the last 40 years. Also one of america's best eating towns for the adventurous.
You can find whole books of exquisite art in your local grocery store; they're called "real estate listings".
http://flickr.com/photos/gosia007/3260903826/
Ice sculptures, ice dancers, portable toboggan run, and kids waiting to get onto the ice rink.
I've really just about had it with all of these 'Detroit Sucks' stories here on Neatorama. There are many MANY cities with problems and decaying areas. I'm sure I can take a great 'check out the crap' tours of Pittsburg, Columbus, and Memphis. But another story about Detroit's vacant houses is a trip to the front page. Not Neat at all.
On top of it being just about enough, as mentioned above, these photos are bland and frankly cowardly drive-bys. I've walked up to several of these houses while out taking photos...there are much better ways to shoot these that don't look like they were taken for a real estate catalog. Several I recognize in particular are a block away from great new developments and the city just hasn't had the chance to sweep these places away yet.
Sorry for the rant, but this one was the straw that broke the back...some very weak photos that some guy is trying to sell and help make sure Detroit's image stays in the toilet for as long as humanly possible.
Enough.
i love abandoned photographers but thsi was not one of my favs.
This is a collection of photos, the same angle and type of colors and lighting were kept to keep consistancy within the collection.
It's just something this guys doing, for fun, or for money who cars?
With respect to Mattie and atanguay, I agree. I lived in Windsor for a few years and would often cross the bridge to come to Detroit. The people who revel in kicking Detroit are the same who dismissed Chicago, New York and Cleveland when they were at their lowest.
I care, because I'm just completely sick of Detroit getting kicked while it's down...over and over and over. As I mentioned above, there is a real and concrete revitalization of parts of Detroit that are being completely ignored. Areas that I would never go into as a kid and young adult are great destinations to go to now. And the city has suffered and worked really hard to make that happen. Like I said before...enough.
Detroit was one of the first cities to plumb the depths of what happens when the "Old Economy" crumbles. It will not be the last.
It may even be that people are shooting Drive-bys in your town long after Detroit has been reborn in the Next Economy.